
A specific Instagram comment appears to be following Hilary Duff lately. Within minutes of someone posting a picture, a stranger types something along the lines of, “Did she get filler? Her face appears more rounded. After her post in April 2025, it occurred once more, and ever since she announced her return to music after a protracted hiatus, it has been occurring more frequently. The timing is almost comical. The album isn’t the first topic of conversation when Duff returns from a more subdued period. It’s her face.
Women’s magazine was informed by Dr. Michael Zarrabi, a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon who has no professional connection to Duff and is speaking solely based on observation, that the eyes were the first thing he noticed. According to him, there is a noticeable increase in the distance between the lashes and the eyebrow, and the brow sits higher than it used to. He might be correct. It’s also possible that’s just how a well-rested 38-year-old appears on a red carpet with excellent lighting and a talented makeup crew. Zarrabi himself took care to frame it so that surgeons making these decisions based on photos are making educated guesses rather than diagnoses.
The level of specificity in the theorizing is intriguing. Brow lift, upper blepharoplasty, Botox concentrated around the eyes and forehead, and possibly some cheek filler. Zarrabi acknowledged that her jawline and cheek position have held up suspiciously well over the past ten years, but he refrained from speculating about a facelift, pointing out that it would be unusual at her age. Almost every discussion about an actress who was well-known as a teenager and is still identifiable decades later revolves around the phrase “suspiciously well.” Whether the individual wants it or not, aging in public draws this kind of forensic attention.
Although Duff has previously refuted some claims, such as rumors of lip augmentation that surfaced a few years ago, she has remained largely silent about the details. She seems to have followed the same route as many actresses her age, allowing the rumors to remain background noise rather than something noteworthy by neither confirming nor denying the majority of them. It’s a sensible tactic. By remaining silent, one can avoid both the denial that is dissected pixel by pixel and the admission that encourages further investigation.
As you watch this unfold, the cultural rhythm seems almost predictable. With very little space in between, a child star grows up, ages normally, and is accused of either letting herself go or doing too much to stop it. Christina Aguilera is treated similarly. Reba McEntire agrees, and so will Duff’s successor. Whether or not she has had a brow lift isn’t really the interesting part. The reason is that an industry created her notoriety based on a 13-year-old’s face, and now it can’t stop comparing the adult one to it, millimeter by millimeter, in the same way that men are never measured.
